Notes
1 A popular trope stereotyping Asian women is the Dragon Lady, featured as cunning and deceitful. The Dragon Lady uses her sexuality as a powerful tool of manipulation but often is emotionally and sexually cold and threatens masculinity. A contemporary example of the Dragon Lady is the Japanese Yakuza leader O-Ren Ishii (played by Lucy Liu) in Kill Bill: Vol. 1 (Tarantino, Citation2003). Another popular stereotype is the Lotus of Blossom. Memoirs of a Geisha (Marshall, Citation2005) epitomizes the Lotus of Blossom (sometimes called the China Doll) trope as feminine, shy, fragile, subservient, and sexually submissive. In Mean Girls (Waters, Citation2004), the names of two Asian girl students are Trang Pak (played by Ky Pham) and Sun Jin Dinh (played by Danielle Nguyen); both these names are mash-ups of Vietnamese and Korean family names. In this film, the most problematic story of Asian woman stereotypes is that the two Asian high schoolers (Trang Pak and Sun Jin Dinh) are both entangled in a romance with their much older White gym teacher, Coach Carr (played by Dwayne Hill), a joke that underlines the fetishizing of Asian women.
2 The series of Asian women portrait posters can be downloaded at https://www.istillbelieve.nyc/downloads.
3 Monyee Chau’s poster can be downloaded at https://www.chinesebornamerican.com/weareresilient.
4 All student names in this article are pseudonyms.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Ryan Shin
Ryan Shin, Professor, Art and Visual Culture Education, School of Art, University of Arizona in Tucson. Email: [email protected]
Jaehan Bae
Jaehan Bae, Professor of Art Education, Department of Art, University of Wisconsin–Oshkosh in Oshkosh. Email: [email protected]
Borim Song
Borim Song, Associate Professor of Art Education, School of Art & Design, East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina. Email: [email protected]